A Paraplegic Dog and a Tiny Piglet Form an Unbreakable Bond—A Heartwarming Friendship Blossoms at an Animal Sanctuary

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Winston and Wilma are being cared for at a farm in Canada

Winston and Wilma love playing together

A paraplegic dog and a piglet that fell from a livestock truck have struck up a heartwarming friendship at an animal sanctuary. Winston the golden retriever and Wilma the pig are “inseparable”, according to Charlotte’s Freedom Farm founder Lauren Edwards.

Real-life Dr Dolittle gives animals with special needs an idyllic life and sees a rescued piglet and a paraplegic dog strike up an extraordinary friendship

The 37-year-old has spent the past five years providing a safe haven for animals rescued from the farming industry in Ontario, Canada. The five-and-a-half acre site is now home to more than 200 pets, many with health conditions, including pigs, ponies, peacocks and pigeons.

Real-life Dr Dolittle gives animals with special needs an idyllic life and sees a rescued piglet and a paraplegic dog strike up an extraordinary friendship

Winston and Wilma met on the farm last September shortly after being adopted separately. “Wilma looked like a puppy in a piglet costume”, said Ms Edwards.

piglet and puppy

“As soon as I brought her into the house and let her out of the cage, she met Winston and within five minutes they were bouncing around the house and playing together. She would drop her body into him. It was the cutest thing I’d ever seen. They just bonded.”

special needs puppy

She added: “She latched on to him. He was the first animal she met at the sanctuary and they were both so young. I think they just made each other comfortable.”

piglet and puppy

Ms Edwards knew she was destined to work with animals from a young age. She spent much of her youth trying to save insects missing wings and on one occasion skipped playing with her friends to rescue dragonflies injured in torrential rain.

Lauren Edwards has more than 200 animals at her sanctuary

She bought a farm in 2015 and two years later hand-reared her first rescue animal, a lamb called Charlotte. Her penchant for animal care snowballed and by the end of 2019 her two-acre site was bursting at the seams with more than 100 residents.

piglet and puppy

“I then took in a couple of baby goats and baby lambs and, at one point, I was bottle feeding five of them”, Ms Edwards said. “That’s when I realised rescuing farm animals was what I needed to do. There is only one other farm sanctuary in the area, so there were loads of animals needing somewhere to go.”

Winston and Wilma always gravitate towards each other

Winston and Wilma soon became inseparable and moved into Ms Edwards’ home, where they watched TV together, played in a ball pit and explored the farm side-by-side. There were fears their bond would break when Wilma joined the farm’s other pigs during Winston’s surgery, but the pair sought each other out after his recovery.